One of the major requirements we have is what I call a ?data quality  
marker?. So the blood pressure recorded is 88/124 but what is the  
?value/ quality? of this measurement.
IMHO any recorded value is useless unless the quality of this  
measurement can be established and taken into account when  
interpreting the data

In order to establish this data quality we need to add some  
attributes to the observation archetypes used to record such  
measurement.

So far as we can see now we think that these attributes are a data  
quality field and a device/instrument reference (which requires a  
device archetype) and this is what we would like to propose to the  
community.

Since I don?t know exactly how to do that and we still have many  
unanswered questions I?ll describe what we?re thinking about. It?s  
very well possible that these thing are already in place, in that  
case we?re aren?t aware of that and would like to be pointed in the  
right direction.

In our ?model? data quality can be described as: excellent, good,  
doubtful and insufficient.

Here the first hurdle arises: one needs a protocol to define what is  
excellent, good etc. These are probably ?local? criteria, so the  
can?t be embedded in a general archetype.
Our idea is to create a specialisation of the observation archetype  
in question, in which the local protocol is attached. For instance  
this blood pressure archetype with the local Dutch data quality  
criteria would be openEHR-EHR-OBSERVATION.blood_pressure- 
data_qualityNL.v1.adl

To give an example these are the criteria for blood pressure we?re  
thinking off:

Excellent:
data measured/obtained by a qualified healthcare provider, with a  
certified instrument/device that?s calibrated against a ?golden  
standard?, the measurement error is within a tight bandwidth (<5%),  
the validity duration of the calibration isn?t expired, maintained on  
time and by qualified personal
(This can?t be met when self-measuring in the home situation)

Good:
data measured/obtained by a qualified person (this can also be a  
properly trained patient/citizen), with a certified (CE marked)  
instrument/device that?s self calibrating, the measurement error is  
within a tight bandwidth  (I.e. machine is approved by the European  
society of Hypertension (ESH), the machine isn?t broke and  
functioning well


Poor/ Doubtful

data measured/obtained by a qualified person (this can also be a  
properly trained patient/citizen), with a certified instrument/device  
that?s self calibrating, the measurement error isn?t within a tight  
bandwidth  (CE marking alone allows measurement errors >7%), the  
machine isn?t broke and functioning well

Insufficient: in all the other situations



As a consequence we need to add at least one other attribute: a  
reference/ link to the device used. In our opinion there should be a  
separate archetype for a device/instrument. In this archetypes not  
only the unique identifiers of this device are recorded but also  
information about calibration, maintenance etc. etc. So far as I  
understand/can see such an archetype doesn?t exist today.
Our idea is to use the demographic archetype model for this. In fact  
there is already a demographic archetype subtype for ?agents?. So  
either we extent this subclass so it can be used for devices or we  
create a new archetype class for devices/instruments based on this  
agent model.

Another thing that is already established is the capability of a  
healthcare professional. I.e. is this person properly trained to  
operate a device/instrument? In that respect I would like to add  
similar capabilities for non-health care professionals. In the above  
case patients/ citizens also can measure their own blood pressure.   
Before they can do that, they?re trained and examined. Only then  
they?re capable of producing ?good quality? (provided that they meet  
the other criteria as well) data.


Can anybody please comment on this? As stated before it would be  
really of great help if we could organise some sort of ?archetype  
boot camp? to create an expanding community of clinicians who know  
how to create archetypes and harmonize the ?wishes and ideas? that  
will come up as soon as more people start creating and using archetypes.

Cheers,


Stef


  
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